We are integrative comparative physiologists who study the effects of environmental stressors on neural, endocrine, and cardiac systems. From brains to biomarkers, our goal is to understand the mechanisms and consequences of stress on animal physiology.

  • Opportunities

    Interested in joining the team? Hardworking, critical thinkers with an interest in comparative physiology are encouraged to email [email protected] to find out about current and…

  • What’s New?

    Keep tabs on the lab and see what fun things we have been up to lately! July 5th, 2023 – The lab went and explored…

Project Updates

  • Mechanistic and functional connections between stress and adult neurogenesis in fish
  • Effects of aquatic pollutants on fish physiology, morphology, and performance
  • Quantitative proteomics as a tool for biomarker discovery and novel insights into animal physiology
  • March 2021. Congratulations Oliver Bullingham on winning the Keith Ronald Undergrad Scholarship!
  • February 2021. Check out our BioRxiv preprint on age-specific responses to cold-acclimation in painted turtles. 
  • January 2021. Welcome to the lab Derin Calik, new MSc candidate in the Alderman and Gillis labs
  • September 2020. Alderman Lab receives new funding from Fisheries and Oceans Canada to continue timely research on the impacts of diluted bitumen exposure on early life stages of salmon, with collaborators Drs. Todd Gillis (Guelph), Chris Kennedy (SFU), and Tony Farrell (UBC)
  • August 2020. Congratulations Oliver Bullingham, winner of a Mitacs Research Training Award
  • May 2020. Welcome to the lab Oliver Bullingham, winner of the Ted Morwick Summer Research Assistantship
  • April 2020. Alderman Lab awarded an NSERC Discovery Grant and ECR Launch Supplement to study The Mechanisms and Outcomes of Stress-Induced Changes to Neurogenesis in Zebrafish
  • January 2020. Three new papers accepted, including two papers from Sean Avey’s MSc thesis published in Aquatic Toxicology, and a new proteomics paper on alligator hearts
  • January 2020. Alderman Lab receives new funding from Great Lakes Fisheries Commission to investigate biomarkers of sea lamprey parasitism in lake trout, with collaborators Drs. Cheryl Murphy (Michigan State) and Rick Goetz (NOAA)
  • November 2019. Congratulations Sean Avey on a successful MSc defense
  • July 2019. Join Drs. Sarah Alderman and Matt Vickaryous at Society for Experimental Biology in Seville, Spain for their #BrainsInSpain session: Brain Building – Plasticity in Form and Function of the Central Nervous System
  • June 2019. New paper published in Nature Scientific Reports by Drs. Sarah Alderman, Dane Crossley (North Texas), Ruth Elsey and Todd Gillis entitled: Hypoxia-induced reprogramming of the cardiac phenotype in American alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) revealed by quantitative proteomics